cblc137 and Neuroblastoma

cblc137 has been researched along with Neuroblastoma* in 3 studies

Other Studies

3 other study(ies) available for cblc137 and Neuroblastoma

ArticleYear
Dual Targeting of Chromatin Stability By The Curaxin CBL0137 and Histone Deacetylase Inhibitor Panobinostat Shows Significant Preclinical Efficacy in Neuroblastoma.
    Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research, 2021, 08-01, Volume: 27, Issue:15

    We investigated whether targeting chromatin stability through a combination of the curaxin CBL0137 with the histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor, panobinostat, constitutes an effective multimodal treatment for high-risk neuroblastoma.. The effects of the drug combination on cancer growth were examined. The combination of CBL0137 and panobinostat enhanced nucleosome destabilization, induced an IFN response, inhibited DNA damage repair, and synergistically suppressed cancer cell growth. Similar synergistic effects were observed when combining CBL0137 with other HDAC inhibitors. The CBL0137/panobinostat combination significantly delayed cancer progression in xenograft models of poor outcome high-risk neuroblastoma. Complete tumor regression was achieved in the transgenic Th-MYCN neuroblastoma model which was accompanied by induction of a type I IFN and immune response. Tumor transplantation experiments further confirmed that the presence of a competent adaptive immune system component allowed the exploitation of the full potential of the drug combination.. The combination of CBL0137 and panobinostat is effective and well-tolerated in preclinical models of aggressive high-risk neuroblastoma, warranting further preclinical and clinical investigation in other pediatric cancers. On the basis of its potential to boost IFN and immune responses in cancer models, the drug combination holds promising potential for addition to immunotherapies.

    Topics: Animals; Carbazoles; Chromatin; Drug Combinations; Drug Evaluation, Preclinical; Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors; Mice; Neuroblastoma; Panobinostat; Tumor Cells, Cultured

2021
Critical Role for GAB2 in Neuroblastoma Pathogenesis through the Promotion of SHP2/MYCN Cooperation.
    Cell reports, 2017, 03-21, Volume: 18, Issue:12

    Growing evidence suggests a major role for Src-homology-2-domain-containing phosphatase 2 (SHP2/PTPN11) in MYCN-driven high-risk neuroblastoma, although biologic confirmation and a plausible mechanism for this contribution are lacking. Using a zebrafish model of MYCN-overexpressing neuroblastoma, we demonstrate that mutant ptpn11 expression in the adrenal gland analog of MYCN transgenic fish promotes the proliferation of hyperplastic neuroblasts, accelerates neuroblastomagenesis, and increases tumor penetrance. We identify a similar mechanism in tumors with wild-type ptpn11 and dysregulated Gab2, which encodes a Shp2 activator that is overexpressed in human neuroblastomas. In MYCN transgenic fish, Gab2 overexpression activated the Shp2-Ras-Erk pathway, enhanced neuroblastoma induction, and increased tumor penetrance. We conclude that MYCN cooperates with either GAB2-activated or mutant SHP2 in human neuroblastomagenesis. Our findings further suggest that combined inhibition of MYCN and the SHP2-RAS-ERK pathway could provide effective targeted therapy for high-risk neuroblastoma patients with MYCN amplification and aberrant SHP2 activation.

    Topics: Animals; Animals, Genetically Modified; Apoptosis; Carbazoles; Carcinogenesis; Carrier Proteins; Cell Proliferation; Gene Amplification; Gene Expression Profiling; Humans; MAP Kinase Signaling System; Mutation; N-Myc Proto-Oncogene Protein; Neuroblastoma; Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase, Non-Receptor Type 11; Risk Factors; Zebrafish; Zebrafish Proteins

2017
Therapeutic targeting of the MYC signal by inhibition of histone chaperone FACT in neuroblastoma.
    Science translational medicine, 2015, Nov-04, Volume: 7, Issue:312

    Amplification of the MYCN oncogene predicts treatment resistance in childhood neuroblastoma. We used a MYC target gene signature that predicts poor neuroblastoma prognosis to identify the histone chaperone FACT (facilitates chromatin transcription) as a crucial mediator of the MYC signal and a therapeutic target in the disease. FACT and MYCN expression created a forward feedback loop in neuroblastoma cells that was essential for maintaining mutual high expression. FACT inhibition by the small-molecule curaxin compound CBL0137 markedly reduced tumor initiation and progression in vivo. CBL0137 exhibited strong synergy with standard chemotherapy by blocking repair of DNA damage caused by genotoxic drugs, thus creating a synthetic lethal environment in MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma cells and suggesting a treatment strategy for MYCN-driven neuroblastoma.

    Topics: Antineoplastic Agents; Carbazoles; DNA Repair; DNA-Binding Proteins; High Mobility Group Proteins; Humans; Molecular Targeted Therapy; Nervous System Neoplasms; Neuroblastoma; Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc; Signal Transduction; Transcriptional Elongation Factors

2015